* Global recovery fears send stocks tumbling; boosts bonds
* U.S. housing data falls short of bearish projections
* Euro hits six-week low vs dlr, nine-year trough vs yen
By Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Al Yoon
LONDON/NEW YORK, Aug 24 (Reuters) - World stocks dropped to one-month lows on Tuesday and the yen hit a 15-year high as investors jumped out of risky assets and into safe havens on further signs of anaemic economic recovery.
Pessimism about the global recovery has grown infectious in recent weeks and was affirmed on Tuesday by a report showing U.S. home sales slid more than expected to their slowest place in 15 years. [
].Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said he was concerned about the strength of recovery in the U.S., though a return to recession was unlikely.
"The wheels are coming off the recovery," said Keith Springer, president of Capital Financial Advisory Services in Sacramento, California.
Earlier, a Bank of England policymaker said the UK risked sliding back into recession, adding to broader risk aversion. The comments drove 10-year British government bond yields near record lows and 30-year German Bund yields to all-time troughs as investors sought refuge in government debt. Bond yields move inversely to prices.
In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average <
> slumped 124.80 points, or 1.23 percent, to 10,049.61. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.SPX> fell 14.64 points, or 1.37 percent, to 1,052.72 and the Nasdaq Composite Index < > slid 33.83 points, or 1.57 percent, to 2,125.80.The bearish tone deepened after the U.S. housing report. It showed July sales of existing homes dropped a record 27.2 percent from June to an annual rate of 3.83 million units. Analysts polled by Reuters expected sales would fall 12 percent to 4.7 million, in part due to expiration of tax credits.
"The problem that pushed us into recession to some degree still remains: There's still imbalance in the housing market, said Zach Pandl, an economist at Nomura Securities International in New York. "Even after four years of declines, housing remains the key threat to the (economic) recovery."
Major European shares <
> shed more than 2 percent, and the MSCI world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS> fell 1.2 percent to its lowest since July 20. The Thomson Reuters global stock index <.TRXFLDGLPU> was also 1.2 percent lower.Japan's Nikkei average <
> fell 1.3 percent, dipping below the closely watched 9,000 mark for the first time in 15 months, pressured by selling from hedge funds and foreigners.The Nikkei index has shed nearly 15 percent so far this year, compared to a 2.6 percent fall in the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index. The 9,000-9,100 range had been strong support for the benchmark Nikkei since last year.
BUOYANT YEN
The yen reached a new 15-year high against the dollar and a nine-year peak against the euro on fears the global economy was slowing. The yen was also helped as Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda's resisted market pressure to comment on currency intervention. [
]The dollar <JPY=> fell as low as 83.57 yen. It was last trading at 83.86, for a loss of 1.42 percent versus the yen.
"Unless the Japanese step in with something more definitive, we will see speculative accounts drive the dollar/yen down to 80 yen," said Paul Robson, RBS Global Banking currency strategist. "That will hurt the Japanese economy pretty hard, unless they do something more on the fiscal side or resort to more quantitative easing."
Against the dollar, the euro rose 0.32 percent to 1.2698.
The scramble for less risky assets sent the 10-year and 30-year German Bund yields <DE10YT=TWEB> <DE30YT=TWEB> down more than 0.1 percentage point to record lows at 2.17 percent and 2.78 percent respectively.
Benchmark 10-year U.S. government yields declined 0.11 percentage point on the day to 2.49 percent <US10YT=RR>, the lowest in about 17-months.
"The market is looking for any sign of weakness... There's so much bearishness around the U.S. economy at the moment and that's casting a pall over equity markets and helping government bonds," said Nick Stamenkovic, strategist at RIA Capital Markets.
In commodities, U.S. light sweet crude oil <CLc1> fell $1.02, or 1.4 percent, to $72.08 per barrel, as doubts about the ability of top oil consumer the United States to work through record stocks weighed on sentiment.
Gold <XAU=> rose $8.50, or 0.69 percent, to $1231.90.
(Additional reporting by William James and Anirban Nag in London and Rodrigo Campos in New York; Editing by Andrew Hay)